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We were awarded a Medal and Diploma at the last exhibition of M. C. M. Association for our goods.

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HOW TO LOOK YOUNG – SIXTEEN Don't paint or use vile Hair Restorers, but simply apply Hagan's Magnolia Balm upon your face, neck and hands, and use Lyon's Kathairon upon your r. The Balm makes your complexion pearly, soft and natural, and you can't tell what did it. It removes freckles, tan, sallowness, ring-marks, moth-patches, etc.; and in place of a red, rustio face, you have the marble purity of an exquisite belle. It gives to middle age the bloom of perpetual youth. Add these effects to a splendid head of hair produced by the Kathairon, and a lady has done her best in the way of adornmen' Br spinster Stars when than geticlos qro around.

TALES OF THE LIVING AGE.

CLEMENCE D'ORVILLE; or, From the Palace to the Steppe. A Novel of Russian High Life. Translated from “ Bis in die Steppe " of Karl Detlef. And CLELIA, from the German of A. Mels. 1 vol. Price 38 cents. Boston. Littell & Gay. "These stories are not only interesting in themselves, but are remarkable as giving an apparently securate idea of two very distinct phases of life. The scene of the first is laid in Russia, and much of the action takes place in the wild and romantic region of the Steppe, while some of the more important incldents occur at the palace of the Princess Souwanoff in one of the most aristocratic quarters of St. Petersburg. The characters are all distinct and original. To that of Clemence a tragic interest attaches, which is well sustained throughout the narrative.

"Clelia is a short narrative of rapid adventures and cunningly conceived plots. The scene is laid in Italy, and the interest is adroitly kept up to the close."- Hearth and Home, N. Y.

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THE AUTHOR'S EDITION.

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460 CHAPEL STREET (OPPOSITE YALE COLLEGE), NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT.

NEW BOOKS JUST PUBLISHED.

THE AMERICAN COLLEGES AND THE AMERICAN PUBLIC. By Professor NOAH PORTER, D.D., Yale College; author of "The Human Intellect," etc. 12mo., 284 pages. Extra cloth, tinted paper. Price $1.50.

"The best book ever published on this subject of collegiate education in America.'. — Springfield Røpublican.

SONGS OF YALE. A New Collection of the Songs of Yale, with Music. Edited by CHAS. 8.
ELLIOT, Class of 1867. 16mo., 116 pages. Price in extra cloth, $1.00; in super extra cloth,
beveled boards, tinted paper, gilt edges, $1.50.
The best collection of College Songs ever published.

UNIVERSITY SERIES.

Educational and Scientific Lectures, Addresses and Essays, brought out in neat pamphlet form, of uniform style and price. L-"ON THE PHYSICAL BASIS OF LIFE." By Prof. T. H. HUXLEY, LL.D., F.R.S. With an Introduction by a Professor in Yale College. 12mo., pp. 36. Price 25 cents. The interest of Americans in this lecture by Professor Huxley can be judged from the great demand for it: the fifth thousand is now being sold.

II. THE CORRELATION OF VITAL AND PHYSICAL FORCES. By Prof. GEORGE F. BARKER, M.D., of Yale College. A lecture delivered before Am. Inst., N. Y. Pp. 86. Price 25 cents.

"

Though this is a question of cold science, the author handles it with ability, and invests it with Interest. A series of notes appended is valuable as a reference to works quoted."— Prov. (R. I.)

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By far the ablest reply to Prof. Huxley which has been written.

Other valuable Lectures and Essays will soon be published in this series.

Any of the above sent to any address in the United States, postage paid, on receipt of price. A liberal discount to the trade.

THE

COLLEGE COURANT.

Prof. Goldwin Smith will soon commence a series of articles in the College Courant, reviewing John Stuart Mill's "Subjection of Women."

Prof. James D. Dana still continues to contribute valuable articles to its columns.

President James McCosh will soon contribute some important articles.

The ablest writers have been engaged to write for the new volume which commences July 1st.

The Courant has had the most unparalleled success. It always contains the freshest news, the best contributed articles, the most interesting and reliable scientific information, and is always interesting to every intelligent, educated person.

Terms: One year in advance
Single Copies

Specimen copies sent on receipt of stamp.

$4.00.

.10.

Address The College Courant.

New Haven, Conn.

ᎾᎡᎬᎪᎢ SPRING AND SUMMER SUMMER TONIC.

Medical treatment has been revolutionised. The drastic purgatives with which it was the fashion to scour the system for every allment, twenty years ago, have been abandoned. At last the discovery has been made that RENOVATION, NOT PROSTRATION, is the true medical philosophy. The introdue tion of Plantation Bitters opened the eyes of the world to this great fact. The life-sustaining principle embodied in this great Vegetable Restorative is manifested in the weak and desponding by an immediate and most encouraging change. A pleasant glow, the precursor of returning health, is die fused through the system, and every day the invalid is conscious of a new accession of vital power. If the appetite has falled it is quickened; if digestion has been painful and imperfect, it becomes eary and thorough; if the liver is terpid, it is roused and regulated; if the nerves are relaxed, they are strength* smed and restrung; if the brain has been haunted by morbid fancies, they are put to flight, and hops and cheerfulness return. The old practice was to convulse, and rack and strain the enfeebled patient with powerful cathartics. It was like clubbing a man after he was down. Happily, this false and fatal mode of treatment no longer finds favor with the enlightened members of the faculty. In the thes of the extraordinary cures of general debility, dyspepsia, billousness, constipation and mental de spondency, wrought by Plantation Bitters, no practitioner not in league with death and the undertaker could persist in it. The terrible evacuants which were once prescribed as Spring and Summer medicines, have utterly lost their prestige. The sick will not take them, and Plantation Bitters, in which are combined the elements of a stomachie, an invigorant, a mild laxative, a nervine, and sa anti-bilious specifia, reigns in their stead.

A NEW

FOOD DISCOVERY.

Never before in the history of the world has science achieved so valuable a discovery as that of the Butritive, life-giving, life-inspiring diet - for the infant and the adult, the sick and the strong, the alestric imparting power of the Sea Moss Farine furnishes.

Upon the nervous system of the debilitated, its phosphoric power acts with a promptness that is wonderful

A package costing Twenty-five Cents will made sixteen quarts of Blane Mange, and a like quantity of Custards, Creams, Puddings, &c., &c. It is the best Brain Food in the World. Its cheapness and excellence will commend it to every home and hospital in America. Truly, "It is the gift of a bountiful Providence, who sends us bread out of the very stones." For the healthy it will make a delightful Blane Mange, Puddings of all kinds, Pies, Custards, Cream Cakes, etc., etc. For the afflicted-it will relieve nausea, tone up the most sensitive stomach, quiet the nerves, cure pulmonary catarrh and nervous asthma, if not consumption. As a tonic for all serofulous complaints, impure blood and diseased mucous membranes actual results demonstrate that medical men have never before discovered its equal. It may, in brief, be administered with most happy effects to any patient living.

Ask your Grocer or Druggist for Sea Moss Farine.

Manufactured from pure Irish Moss, or Carrageen, by

THE BAND SEA MOSS FARINE CO.,

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